Uncomfortable
#1
Posted 2016-March-20, 06:11
♥ Q J 6 5 3
♦ J
♣ Q 10 8 6 4
You open 1♥, LHO overcalls 2♣, P bids 2♠ (forcing), which comes back to you. I don't know the vul - this was passed to me. Assume scoring is some form of imps. What's your call?
#3
Posted 2016-March-20, 08:53
#4
Posted 2016-March-20, 10:24
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#5
Posted 2016-March-20, 12:58
It isn't great to have to bid it as NT may be a terrible contract because of transportation issue. But what's the alternative?
OTOH, unless LHO has made a 2 ♣ overcall on a really bad suit, partner ought to have some good ♦ values and possibly something in ♥ beyond anything held in ♠. 2 ♠ was a forcing bid after all.
2 NT also frees up the whole 3 level for partner to describe his/her hand. If partner rebids a major we play game in that suit.
#6
Posted 2016-March-20, 16:04
What is baby oil made of?
#7
Posted 2016-March-20, 18:04
#8
Posted 2016-March-21, 03:16
If you're too scared to pass of course you bid 2nt. This part is a non-question. Anything else would be ridiculous.
#9
Posted 2016-March-21, 06:26
#11
Posted 2016-March-21, 09:58
daffydoc, on 2016-March-21, 06:26, said:
This is the standard reply (which i fully expected to get). All it shows is a lack of moral courage. Should you be trying to find the bid which has the biggest positive expectation or which has the smallest chance of annoying partner?
If you make unilateral decisions too frequently you're probably a very deluded person, but sometimes constant buck-passing doesn't get the job done and someone needs to stick their neck out.
If we got a bad result on the back of it, I would expect my partner to appreciate I was trying to get us the best result on the board just as I expect the same of him whenever he takes any decision, mundane or otherwise.
As for the expectation from passing versus bidding on, I assess the former as having a better return on average non-vul. You should devote your time to proving me wrong.
#12
Posted 2016-March-21, 11:58
wank, on 2016-March-21, 09:58, said:
If you make unilateral decisions too frequently you're probably a very deluded person, but sometimes constant buck-passing doesn't get the job done and someone needs to stick their neck out.
If we got a bad result on the back of it, I would expect my partner to appreciate I was trying to get us the best result on the board just as I expect the same of him whenever he takes any decision, mundane or otherwise.
Agree. It's a kind of bridge player's fallacy, committed in almost every thread on BBF, to think that just because an action can have silly outcomes, it must be wrong.
#13
Posted 2016-March-21, 12:11
wank, on 2016-March-21, 09:58, said:
Au contraire mon chum.
I've seen countless partnerships disintegrate when the partner starts overbidding to compensate for impending moral courage and if I do it twice with the same partner the Director or a committee will roll back my successes if my partner so much as flutters an eyelash before they make that forcing bid.
Passing a reverse after having responded on a (the wrong) shapely 5 count is not in the same league as this one.
What is baby oil made of?
#14
Posted 2016-March-21, 13:06
#15
Posted 2016-March-21, 13:47
wank, on 2016-March-21, 09:58, said:
If you make unilateral decisions too frequently you're probably a very deluded person, but sometimes constant buck-passing doesn't get the job done and someone needs to stick their neck out.
If we got a bad result on the back of it, I would expect my partner to appreciate I was trying to get us the best result on the board just as I expect the same of him whenever he takes any decision, mundane or otherwise.
As for the expectation from passing versus bidding on, I assess the former as having a better return on average non-vul. You should devote your time to proving me wrong.
"moral courage" What the heck is that in a card game? Are you a lawyer?
How could lying to you partner be "moral" anything?
#16
Posted 2016-March-21, 14:32
fourdad, on 2016-March-21, 13:47, said:
How could lying to you partner be "moral" anything?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Courage,
especially:
"Courage (also called bravery, bravado or valour) is the choice and willingness to confront agony, pain, danger, uncertainty or intimidation. Physical courage is courage in the face of physical pain, hardship, death or threat of death, while moral courage is the ability to act rightly in the face of popular opposition, shame, scandal, discouragement, or personal loss."
#17
Posted 2016-March-21, 16:16
Courage is not the right word, treachery, cowardice , deserting your only friend,
Or better still very very bad bridge.
#18
Posted 2016-March-21, 16:59
However, if partner wants to pass on these hands, I think we're better off playing non-forcing free bids (and I'm happy to play them). This isn't an annoyance at breaking agreements so much as a recognition that we should be playing systems that match our natural inclinations.
#19
Posted 2016-March-21, 20:50
wank, on 2016-March-21, 09:58, said:
As for the expectation from passing versus bidding on, I assess the former as having a better return on average non-vul. You should devote your time to proving me wrong.
Although I agree in principle that both partners should be allowed to sometimes take speculative action, the fact that you are proposing to pass 2S on this hand suggests that maybe you're not ready for that kind of power...
Partner should have a relatively sound 2S bid because they have the option to double 2C and then convert to 2S and if partner has stretched in terms of HCP, then then they should have short clubs, extra spade length or both!
If partner rebids a non-forcing 3S, you have an obvious 4S raise.
Finally, holding 2 keycards and a diamond control, slam is absolutely in the picture. How about [QJT9xxx AKx xxx ---] or something similar?
If I held an actual minimum hand like [xx KQxxx Kx Kxxx] AND I had a hint from RHO's tempo that they might have some values, then pass *might* have some merit.
#20
Posted 2016-March-21, 22:41
Jinksy, on 2016-March-20, 06:11, said:
♥ Q J 6 5 3
♦ J
♣ Q 10 8 6 4
You open 1♥, LHO overcalls 2♣, P bids 2♠ (forcing), which comes back to you. I don't know the vul - this was passed to me. Assume scoring is some form of imps. What's your call?
- 2N = NAT. Perhaps they won't lead a ♦.
- 3♠ = NAT. Susceptible to ♣ ruffs but could well win the post-mortem.
- 3♥ = NAT but daft.
- 3♣ = UCB and demented.
- Other e.g. Wank's Pass (or an urgent telephone summons) might be best of all.